Recently Spencer Baird, EVP and president,
martech, Inmar Intelligence wrote a white paper
titled:
Nothing in Retail Is Guaranteed, Except These Things where he with clear detail outlined why companies within the foodservice space need to evolve. The team at Foodservice Solutions® believes that it is well worth the time it takes to read.
Personalized,
targeted digital marketing and messaging will need to reach shoppers in more
places than ever, motivate shoppers in more ways than ever, and create
relationships with shoppers that are stronger than ever.
Whether you call
them predictions, forecasts or guesses, we’re confident the following things
will be true for retailers this year — no matter what curveballs get thrown at
them. Why? We believe we’re in for the biggest shift in retail history,
revolving around the dramatic change to digital mindsets.
The most important things in retail will become even more
important. The things that have always been important to retailers —
convenience, value and personalization — will continue to matter. In fact,
they’ll matter more than ever. However, the ways that retailers deliver on
those three core ideas is ripe for innovation.
·
The hybrid in-store and online model will continue to
explode because it delivers convenience for shoppers.
·
Bundling will need to be redefined to offer even larger
value to customers.
·
Personalized white-glove service will have to expand
beyond the in-store experience.
A study conducted by
Inmar in January of this year indicated that 96% of shoppers still made grocery
purchases in-store in the prior three months, and 64% indicated that they
also made online grocery purchases within the same period. That’s massive.
But an ever-growing part of that in-store shopping is being driven by off-site
and online experiences. Personalized, targeted digital marketing and messaging
will need to reach shoppers in more places than ever, motivate shoppers in more
ways than ever, and create relationships with shoppers that are stronger than
ever. All of that messaging will need to be focused on new — and
ever-changing—interpretations of convenience and value, because what matters to
one shopper isn’t necessarily what matters to another.
Staying laser-focused
on customer needs is going to be increasingly important as everyone competes
for wallet share, and that requires an organizational transformation that
starts at the root level. Retailers will have to change their mindset, and make
sure that every single thing they and their partners are doing in-store, online
and off-site is geared to meeting those needs.
·
The retailers who understand transformation is a mindset
problem will succeed on today’s playing field.
·
New tools will continue to provide insights into all
customers, not just the most loyal ones, so it’s time to change the age-old
habit of only focusing on the core 20%.
·
Curation can no longer be driven by shelves; it needs to
be focused on meeting individual customer needs.
Transformation isn’t
about checking off to-dos. It’s about making sure that you and your
organization are continuously learning and improving. All of the data in the
world won’t do you much good if you don’t use it to take an honest look at both
your successes and failures. The truly great retailers — those that will be
around to see the 2050 digital transformation trends — will never stop trying
to learn, improve and transform.
Retailers are
rightfully sinking a lot of money into digital transformation. That trend is
not only going to continue, but also accelerate, especially as businesses feel
like they’re falling behind. How can we be so sure? Quite simply, those
investments are paying off for retailers. That doesn’t mean businesses should
just blindly buy digital tools and hope for a big payoff, however.
·
As digital transformation accelerates, measuring results
is going to become increasingly important.
·
Attribution will become more complicated — and more
crucial — as digital channels continue to multiply.
·
Investing in your company’s digital mindset, and changing
the way your organization thinks about transformation, can have the biggest
impact on ROI.
Whether your company
is well on its way toward digital transformation or just getting started, one
of the most important questions you’ll need to periodically reassess is, “How
am I going to measure results?” The good news is that today’s cross-channel
attribution can provide the measurements you need to ensure that you’re on the right
path.
Nobody likes to
spend money on business tools that don’t succeed, or to invest in products and
services that they don’t really need. That’s one of the core reasons that
outcome as a service (OaaS) is starting to replace the traditional “buy it and
hope it works” model. Another reason? Clients like knowing that their partners
have a vested interest in their success.
·
The OaaS model will continue to create a stronger bond
between retailers and their technology partners because of shared victories.
·
The entire commercial approach will continue to evolve
and improve, because of true objective alignment focused on improving customer
loyalty.
·
Collective learning that leads to joint improvement will
be a topic that gains even more traction in ’22 and beyond, because learning is
the root of resilience.
Much like the
mindset shift required to make digital transformation successful, progressing
toward an OaaS model will require cultural shifts that will ripple throughout
organizations. It might not be comfortable at first, but in the end, this
change is going to be better for everyone involved.
Are you ready for some fresh ideations? Do your food marketing ideas look more like yesterday than tomorrow? Interested in learning how our Grocerant Guru® can edify your retail food brand while creating a platform for consumer convenient meal participation, differentiation and individualization? Email us at: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or visit: us on our social media sites by clicking one of the following links: Facebook, LinkedIn, or Twitter
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